Lee calls on North to apologize for alleged attack, punish those responsible

Official investigation finds North Korea fired torpedo at South Korean warship, sinking it

Seoul, South Korea (CNN) -- South Korean President Lee Myung-bak announced Monday his country is suspending trade with North Korea, closing its waters to the North's ships and adopting a newly aggressive military posture after the sinking of a South Korean warship.

"We have always tolerated North Korea's brutality, time and again," Lee said. "We did so because we have always had a genuine longing for peace on the Korean Peninsula. But now things are different."

"North Korea will pay a price corresponding to its provocative acts," he said, according to an English translation of the speech provided by Lee's office. "I will continue to take stern measures to hold the North accountable."

The White House issued a statement Monday supporting South Korea's measures, saying they were "called for and entirely appropriate."

"Specifically, we endorse President Lee's demand that North Korea immediately apologize and punish those responsible for the attack, and, most importantly, stop its belligerent and threatening behavior," the White House statement said.

"U.S. support for South Korea's defense is unequivocal, and the President has directed his military commanders to coordinate closely with their Republic of Korea counterparts to ensure readiness and to deter future aggression."

South Korean military officials on Thursday announced the results of an official investigation into the sinking of the ship, the Cheonan, which concluded that North Korea fired a torpedo that cut the vessel in half.

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North Korea has denied that it sunk the warship, which went down on March 26, killing 46 sailors.

In the nationally televised speech Monday morning, Lee said his country was adopting a posture of "proactive deterrence" toward the North, announcing that "combat capabilities will be reinforced drastically" and that he will focus on improving national security readiness and military discipline.

"If our territorial waters, airspace or territory are violated, we will immediately exercise our right of self-defense," Lee said.

Addressing the alleged attack, Lee said, "Once again, North Korea violently shattered our peace. The sinking of the Cheonan constitutes a military provocation against the Republic of Korea by North Korea."

Lee also admonished his own people, saying that until the attack " we had been forgetting the reality that the nation faces the most belligerent regime in the world."

North Korea will pay a price corresponding to its provocative acts--South Korean President Lee Myung-bak

South Korea's leader called on the North to apologize for the alleged attack and to punish those responsible for carrying it out.

Lee said the alleged attack violated armistice and nonaggression agreements between the two countries. He said he will refer the incident to the U.N. Security Council "so that the international community can join us in holding the North accountable."

Tensions between the nations have escalated since the South released its report on the sinking.

On Friday North Korea threatened to back out of the nonaggression pact with the South after Lee vowed "resolute countermeasures" against the North.

"Firstly, from now on (North Korea) will regard the present situation as the phase of a war..." the North's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said Friday, according to South Korea's Yonhap News Agency.

Should South Korea take steps to retaliate, North Korea will "strongly react to them with such merciless punishment as the total freeze of the inter-Korean relations, the complete abrogation of the north-south agreement on nonaggression and a total halt to the inter-Korean cooperation undertakings," the committee's statement said, Yonhap reported.

The United States strongly condemns North Korea's sinking of a South Korean ship and is consulting with South Korea as it considers its response, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Thursday.

"We're in consultation with a host of different entities including the (U.N.) Security Council ... and we're working closely with the South Koreans," Gibbs said.

Lee's speech Monday brimmed with references to the long history of acrimony between North and South Korea. He spoke from the War Memorial of Korea, the country's main war history museum, and noted that this year marks the 60th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War.

"Permeating this War Memorial of Korea are the spirits of the soldiers of the Republic of Korea and United Nations who shed blood on this land," he said. "Also dedicated here was the monument memorializing the 46 fallen warriors of the corvette Cheonan."